Repairing Screw Hole in ABS

OK, I'm dumb. There I admitted it but I assume that some one else has done it as well. I put a gyprock screw into a 2" ABS drain pipe in a wall. Is there an easy way to repair this? The hole is just below a fitting and I don't believe there is enough space to put a joiner fitting. Any ideas??

The correct method is to cut it out and replace it. If the pipe is horizontal I'd worry the epoxy may fail someday. If it's vertical defiantly stick some epoxy on it and you'll never have to worry about it. In any case clean the pipe well before applying the epoxy, hitting the area just a little bit with some 300 or so grit sandpaper would help it stick.

Cut a 1 inch by 1 inch or slightly larger patch from another piece of ABS. Use a piece of the hub from a fitting, or a piece of pipe of the same diameter. You can warm it in boiling water and then use a hose clamp to force it to conform to the O/D of the pipe you will be patching.

Sand the inside of the patch and sand around the hole. Use ABS solvent to solvent-weld the patch in place. Secure with a hose clamp for 24 hours while the solvent weld sets up. The result should be as solid as any ABS joint.

I have my own oddball way of patching this type of hole. I use a woodworker's plug cutter to cut pieces of ABS, the same size as those used to cover screws in wood. Then I use a drill that has the same size as the plug I cut to dress out the hole in the pipe, and glue in the plug. Seems to work. It's a tight fit.

take a smooth interior repair coupling and cut it lengthwise slightly off center. Use the larger of the two pieces. Coat the interior with ABS cement, and also the area around the hole. "Snap" the 1/2 coupling over the hole and it will secure itself and seal the damage. No clamps, no rubber, no epoxy, and no eventual failure.